UCLA gymnast Katelyn Ohashi’s new floor routine earned a perfect 10 at the Collegiate Challenge in Anaheim last Saturday, helping UCLA win the quad-meet against Cal, Michigan State and UC Davis, and vaulting the senior into internet fame.

Ohashi, who debuted the routine in UCLA’s season opener against Nebraska, recorded her fourth perfect 10 of her career last Saturday as UCLA scored 49.7 on floor, the fifth-highest mark in school history on the event, and recorded the team’s second straight 197-point total.

The defending national champion Bruins scored 197.7 as a team with Ohashi and junior Kyla Ross both recording perfect 10s with Ross’ coming on uneven bars.

Ohashi’s latest R&B-inspired floor routine that incorporates Tina Turner’s “Proud Mary” with “September” by Earth, Wind & Fire, The Jackson 5′s “I Want You Back” and Michael Jackson’s “The Way You Make Me Feel,” quickly grew into a weekend internet sensation. It was shared on Twitter by ESPN and Bleacher Report. It was viewed nearly 20 million times on Twitter by Monday morning and more than 3 million times on Facebook.

California senator Kamala Harris, civil rights activist Jesse Jackson and journalists from the Atlantic’s Jemele Hill and Rolling Stone’s Jamil Smith were among those who showered Ohashi with praise on social media.

Hill said she was making a note to attend a meet this year. Ohashi responded that she’ll have tickets waiting.

“The ground is no place for a champion,” Jackson wrote on Twitter of Ohashi’s high-flying routine that leads off with a difficult split double-layout tumbling pass and ends with the senior landing a tumbling pass in a full split on the floor.

Ohashi came to UCLA after a decorated career with the U.S. junior national team during which he became one of the top gymnasts in the world. She won the 2013 American Cup over 2016 Olympic gold medalist Simone Biles. Ohashi seemed to be on track to represent the United States in the Olympics as well, but after years of grueling training and abusive coaching, she left elite gymnastics.

Joining the Bruins is what helped piece her back together, she told the Players Tribune.

“She’s found her childlike joy again,” head coach Valorie Kondos Field, the choreographer behind this year’s viral routine and last year’s Michael Jackson-inspired piece that earned more than 90 million total views, told the Southern California News Group last month. “That pure joy that comes from doing gymnastics and being really good at it.”

Thuc Nhi Nguyen has covered UCLA for the Southern California News Group since 2016. A proud Seattle native, she majored in journalism and mathematics at the University of Washington. She likes graphs, animated GIFs and superheroes.